Ringette guide
Ringetteteam treasurer & budget guide
Ice time, officials, and tournament travel give a ringette team a real season-long budget — and it all runs through a volunteer parent treasurer.If you've been handed the team's finances, here's exactly what a ringette team budget covers — and how to keep it under control without a spreadsheet.
What a ringette team budget covers
Every ringette team is a little different, but the money almost always breaks down into these lines — with ice time usually the biggest:
Ice time
Practices and games — typically the biggest line.
Officials
Referees, often paid at the rink.
Equipment & jerseys
Team jerseys, rings, and first-aid.
Tournament entry & travel
Entries plus hotels and meals.
Coaching
Stipends and skills sessions.
Team events
Banquet, photos, and awards.
How ringette team fees work
Player fees cover the bulk; sponsorships and fundraising top it up. Installments are common to ease the cost on families.
Build your ringette team budget in two minutes
You can sketch the whole thing right now with our free team budget calculator — enter your fees and costs and see your projected balance and cost per family instantly.
Governing bodies & compliance
Associations (Ringette Canada and provincial associations) increasingly expect proper financial records — two-person approval on spending, receipts on file, and a year-end statement. RosterLedger gives a volunteer treasurer all of that automatically, no accounting background required.
Make this the easy part of your season
RosterLedger builds your budget from a few questions, tracks every payment, nudges overdue families for you, keeps parents in the loop automatically, and produces every report — no spreadsheet, no accounting required.